A thin layer of white stone dust coats nearly every surface in the southernmost West Bank village of Susya, situated in the South Hebron hills.

The fine layer holds an added weight, occupying crevices, slowly encroaching under makeshift family homes, constantly being swept away only for it to return again.

But the dust is not the only force impinging on Susya.

Makeshift shelter for animals.

30-year-old Ibrahim Nawaja gazed out over the brutal but idyllic rocky landscape of his home village and pointed to the Israeli military outposts punctuating the hillside horizon.

Perhaps only 200 meters from the village, olive trees planted by villagers now grow in no-man’s land. Ibrahim warned of the suffocating boundaries they must share with their new neighbours.

“We cannot walk or use the land there, once a man was shot by a settler just for walking his sheep. If I walk there now the Israelis will make trouble for me,” he added.

Susya is home to about 300 Palestinians whose shanty-like village, like so many others within the Israeli-controlled Area C of the West Bank, is slated for demolition.

16-year-old Oudi sits outside his home with four girls from the neighbours family.

All 'new’ houses built in Susya are the first ones to be demolished Nawaja explained. There are currently seven structures fighting in the high court to remain standing. But this cat-and-mouse game of partial demolitions and threats has been going on in Susya for decades.

“We want to build more houses here,” Nawaja said. “I have been married for two years now, and I want to build a house for my wife and child next to my family home. But I can’t, Israelis will just come and knock it down.”

But the entire town could be demolished at any moment, Ibrahim clarified, as it was all built without permits.

Under the Israeli thumb

The required building permits are virtually impossible to obtain forcing Palestinians to build houses 'illegally’ in the eyes of the Israeli government.

Even though Area C consists of 60 percent of the land in the West Bank, UN figures show Israeli authorities have approved just 1.5 percent of all permit requests by Palestinians between 2010 and 2014.

In 2001 Susya was destroyed, including the cave dwellings where remnants remain.

Legal researcher at human rights NGO Al-Haq, Maha Abdallah, explained how the restriction of permits and threat of demolitions purposefully leads to coercive living conditions for Palestinians.

“Demolitions are part and parcel of a wider policy to get Palestinians to move out of specific areas, specifically Area C and East Jerusalem. This all comes hand in hand with the Israeli settlement enterprise,” Abdallah said.

“Palestinians can challenge the military order in court, but it is very expensive,” Abdallah said, adding the likelihood of a Palestinian actually winning their case is virtually impossible.

“With house demolitions you are talking about families, you’re talking about children, you’re talking about the obstruction of a normal life. It affects access to education access to health facilities, it has many many indirect repercussions at the end of the day.”

It is not only the threat of demolition which makes life difficult for Susya. Only three weeks ago settlers forced a new family to leave their recently built house, Nawaja explained.

“When I arrived there were thirty or forty settlers sitting inside their home. The wife and children were forced outside, terrified, as the husband was at work.”

“The husband then got a phone call from the Israeli police saying if they didn’t leave, they would cancel his son’s work permits for Israel,” Nawaja said.

Contested sites

The current pressure to demolish the Palestinian village of Susya has been led by an illegal Jewish settlement, which is located near an ancient archaeological site from which both villages take their name.

Jewish Susya accuses residents of Palestinian Susya of being illegal squatters. But this is not the first time Palestinian Susya has faced destruction.

The ancient Susya site bears the remains of a 5th–8th century CE synagogue which was converted into a mosque around in the early Islamic and crusader era in the 10th century.

In 1986, the site of Palestinian Susya was declared an archaeological site by Israel, and Susya was demolished. The residents rebuilt a few hundred meters southeast of the original site.

Since then, the old mosque has since been converted back into a synagogue.

Scarring the village are the remnants of old cave dwellings and abolished structures where the community has been razed by Israel four times, in 1991, 1997 and twice in 2001.

16-year-old Oudi walks through his home village of Susya, one day he hope to become an electrician.

Palestinian Authority’s Minister of the Commission Against the Wall and Settlements, Walid Assaf said the future of Susya is uncertain, but believes the residents will rebuild if their homes are demolished.

“It’s every Palestinian family’s dream to own a house,” Assaf exclaimed, explaining how many Palestinians are worn-out of being exiled by Israel.

“We will not accept to be refugees again. We don’t want to accept this idea. We accept we can be killed here, but not to be refugees in other countries again.”

International focus

At first glance, Susya feels nomadic. The Bedouin style tent homes, flap in the hot desert breeze. However, upon closer inspection the village itself has vital infrastructure, much of it donated by European aid.

German solar panels, Irish water pumps, and a children's playground funded by Italy, Norway and Belgium. The school, built in 2010 with help from Spain, now educates around 100 children from the village.

Solar panels donated from Germany have been provides residents of Susya much needed electricity.

In December last year, the EU itself called on Israeli authorities to halt plans for forced transfer of population and demolition of Palestinian housing and infrastructure in Susya.

But the international aid may not hold the political weight it used to. Assaf said a new tide of uncertainty under the Trump administration washes over Palestinians like never before.

According to Israeli organisation Peace Now, 14,454 settlement units in the West Bank have been approved since US President Donald Trump took office, three times the amount approved in the 18 months prior to his inauguration.

Assaf said since the Trump administration came to power, they have greenlighted the further annexation of Palestine. “Before Trump came, there was hope in negotiations. But with Trump now there is no hope, it is one sided. He is supporting Israel in everything.”

Assaf said they will never really know when the bulldozers will come rolling into town. “Where they will start and when they will do it, it depends on political situation.”

Shepherd walk with his sheep on the outskirts of Susya.

As the intense midday sun beat down on Susya, Nawaja stopped to kneel down and brushed the dust off a smooth rock face, uncovering chiselled Arabic writing in the stone.

“It has the date from 1997 when the village was destroyed once. Someone wanted to document what has happened here,” he said, chuckling at the idea. “We have had to rebuild many times.”

“We are not afraid of them demolishing our homes anymore. But we are tired,” Nawaja exhaled, the predicament of living under the constant unknown threat of Israeli bulldozers has taken its toll.

“We are tired of rebuilding over and over. We just want to be able to live in peace and use our land.”